well, you know... we had to give you SOMETHING... right out of the can... with the ridges up the sides...![]()
To be honest we seem to get all the US things eventually. We so can't think for ourselves.

well, you know... we had to give you SOMETHING... right out of the can... with the ridges up the sides...![]()
To be honest we seem to get all the US things eventually. We so can't think for ourselves.![]()
I vote for Publix, but not sure about health care.
Oh yes, but just for me, not John. I was also brought up having apple sauce and bread sauce too, though I have learned some years ago that they are not the traditional accompaniments to turkey. I would still make them if I was cooking Christmas dinner.
If you go back a page... Albert has given us a recipe...![]()
I should know better than to post a question before reading to the last post on a thread......
Thanks Albert.
I am caught up now and wonder what they pour it on besides cold turkey sandwiches? Is it poured over mashed potatoes? Hot turkey?
Thanks.
I think cranberries were one of the things like corn which were native to North America. Since the "sun never set on the British Empire" a lot of foods and styles of clothing, art and architecture made it back to the homeland I thought.
Jan
I should know better than to post a question before reading to the last post on a thread......
Thanks Albert.
I am caught up now and wonder what they pour it on besides cold turkey sandwiches? Is it poured over mashed potatoes? Hot turkey?
Thanks.
I think cranberries were one of the things like corn which were native to North America. Since the "sun never set on the British Empire" a lot of foods and styles of clothing, art and architecture made it back to the homeland I thought.
Jan
Well bread sauce is a thick sauce so doesn't really pour. You just add it as a side to a turkey dinner. I think I might be unusual in liking cold bread sauce though. Most people have cold turkey and stuffing sandwiches. After all with bread sauce you are adding even more bread to bread in a sandwich.
You could well be right about cranberries. Perhaps they were for more upper class people, hence why we had bread sauce!!!actually turkey didn't become popular till the second half of last century - brought over from the US of course
one import I am very happy about.
I've had my benny...Lord only knows what we're having for dinner tonight (mom's turn to cook... I made chili last night...)
oh yeah..
you just brown the meat and throw it in a pot with the McCormick's packet, I use 1 can of pinto beans and a large can of crushed or pureed tomatoes. Let it cook for about 45 minutes on the stove (simmer on low) or I put it in the crock pot for about 2 hrs on low and let it go. & it's done. I like to let it sit overnight though because it lets all the flavors mix together. Serve with Cheese or plain... Mom likes to have rice or pasta with it sometimes. It makes at least 2 meals for us. (probably 4 for you...) I think they may also have a low sodium packet too, but I haven't tried any of that.
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Well, it's been a nail-biting few days, but I'm happy to report I am not on strike, the contract was ratified by a mere 56%My company also has stores in Windsor, Chatham and Sarnia that are a different union local, and they did vote strike! They were voting on the same contract...and yes it is a very crappy contract
I am in the same local as Toronto stores, and if it hadn't been for their votes we would have been on strike too! Mixed feelings on the whole thing BUT now I can continue to plan for the LA/ Alaska B2B
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